Why join?

Already a member?

Zaev earlier promised to dismantle nationalist statues as part of the name deal (Photo: Funky Tee)

Officially known as the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), its desire to be called 'Macedonia' has raised Greek heckles that that implied a claim to a Greek region of the same name.

But the real devil is in Macedonia's constitution, which, Greece says, makes explicit irredentist claims, as the two countries' prime ministers, Zoran Zaev and Alexis Tsipras, meet in Sofia on Thursday (17 May).

"We'll leave them in [together] bilaterally, to give them a chance to just sit there and discuss," Lilyana Pavlova, a Bulgarian minister, told EUobserver, as Sofia prepared to host EU and Balkan leaders for a special summit.

"There's no intention to intervene in any way," in the Zaev-Tsipras talks, to be held in the margins of the event, she said.

There's also little expectation of a happy ending on Thursday, but the EU is building hope in the run-up to its own summit in June.

Tsipras and Zaev "understand quite well that there's a momentum, and that they should use this momentum to get a breakthrough," Bulgaria's Pavlova said.

"We're still hopeful it'll be possible in time for June," an EU diplomat said. Tsipras and Zaev were expected to give other leaders an "optimistic briefing" after their bilateral talks, the diplomat added.

If Greece lifted its old veto by June, that would enable the EU to open accession talks with Macedonia, untying one of the Gordian knots of Balkan politics.

The good news would have a "positive spillover effect" on "the general atmosphere" in the region, the diplomat said.

Greek approval would also enable Nato to take in Macedonia at its summit in July, in a strategic move in Europe at a time of geopolitical tension with Russia.

"The Western Balkans region is in serious need of good news," Zaev's office told EUobserver in a statement.

"If we find a solution with Greece, there will be no reasonable argument to stop us from making a step forward in both EU and Nato integration," it said.

Protocols for a Nato invitation to join would "start automatically … once we have a mutually acceptable solution with Greece," Skopje added.

The two sides have zeroed in on new names, such as Upper Macedonia.

But rewriting the Macedonian constitution to remove offensive language could prove harder to agree, amid the risk of a nationalist backlash in both Greece and Macedonia if things go wrong.

"Changing the name is the easy part. The constitution is the problem," a Greek source, who asked not to be named, told this website.